Showings Jan 2026

Halifax — Dartmouth Regional Market Intelligence

January 2026
Showings & Inventory Report

Single-Family Residential  |  Data Period: January 1 – 31, 2026
Stats from the Nova Scotia Association of REALTORS® (NSAR)

Month vs Month — What Changed and Why It Matters

January opened with a clear signal: buyers were active from the very first week, despite the typical mid-winter hesitation. The daily showing data reveals a market that warmed up quickly and maintained meaningful momentum through the entire month — with a few notable fluctuations worth understanding.

Daily Showings — January 2026 (Halifax–Dartmouth)
Normal Activity Notable Spike Notable Dip

Early Month (Jan 1–4): As expected, January 1 opened with just 40 showings — the holiday hangover effect. By January 2, that number jumped to 137, and the market settled into a healthy 128–188 range through the first week. This is characteristic of buyers who paused over the holidays but returned with intent in the new year.

Mid-Month Surge (Jan 9–11): Showings climbed sharply to 278 on the 9th and held at 270 on the 11th. This mid-January surge is consistent with buyers who received year-end bonuses, finalized mortgage pre-approvals, or resolved holiday logistics. Motivated buyers were clearly in the market.

Late-Month Peaks (Jan 17–18 and Jan 24): The month's highest activity clustered around the third and fourth weeks — 309 showings on the 17th, 323 on the 18th, and a peak of 336 on January 24th. These are strong signals of buyer urgency and growing competition. Weekend inventory tours likely drove the Saturday/Sunday spikes.

Notable Dips (Jan 19, Jan 26): January 19 dropped sharply to 115 showings, and January 26 fell to just 53 — the lowest non-holiday total of the month. These Sunday/Monday dips likely reflect scheduling patterns rather than a pullback in buyer interest, as showing volumes bounced back quickly in both cases.

Month Total: Approximately 5,244 showings across Halifax–Dartmouth in January 2026 — a strong baseline that reflects a market with genuine buyer engagement heading into the spring.

Where Buyers Are Looking — January 2026

The breakdown below shows exactly where buyer interest was concentrated during January. The $400K–$600K corridor dominated activity, accounting for nearly half of all showings. This is critical context for pricing strategy.

Price Range Total Showings % of Market Monthly Avg Showings / Listing
$100,000 – $199,999 75 1.81% 72.58 3.13
$200,000 – $299,999 219 5.30% 211.94 3.32
$300,000 – $399,999 524 12.68% 507.10 5.52
$400,000 – $499,999 985 23.83% 953.23 6.08
$500,000 – $599,999 1,018 24.63% 985.16 5.99
$600,000 – $699,999 512 12.39% 495.48 3.97
$700,000 – $799,999 499 12.07% 482.90 4.16
$800,000 – $899,999 199 4.81% 192.58 3.32
$900,000+ 102 2.47% 98.71 2.91

★ Gold-highlighted rows indicate the top two most active price bands. Data: ShowingTime by Zillow — Halifax–Dartmouth area, January 1–31, 2026.

Inventory & Competition Snapshot — January 2026

Inventory tells the real story of seller competition. Here is a clear-eyed look at what the numbers actually meant for anyone who had their home on the market in January.

January 2026

Active listings (Jan 1)646
New listings during January332
Conditional carry-overs (Jan 1)21
Homes sold from new Jan listings61
Total homes sold (all inventory)185
Total Market Pool 978 homes

What That Means

Absorption rate (sales / total pool)18.9%
Months of supply (est.)~2.4 months
Avg showings per listing~5.4
Unsold after January793 homes
Market conditionSeller-leaning
Sale-to-New-Listing Ratio 55.7%

Plain-language math: In January, there were 978 homes competing for buyers' attention. Of those, 185 sold — that's roughly 1 in every 5.3 homes that found a buyer. The remaining 793 carried forward into February, adding pressure to an already-building inventory base.

The 21 conditional homes from December tell us buyers were already active before the calendar flipped. And the 332 new January listings confirm that seller confidence was high — but supply was climbing alongside demand. Pricing precision and presentation quality were decisive factors in which homes moved and which ones didn't.

978
Total Market Pool
646 active + 332 new listings
185
Homes Sold
61 from new Jan listings
18.9%
Absorption Rate
~1 in 5.3 homes sold

What This Means for Sellers Right Now

  • Buyers were active and ready in January — but so was the competition. With 978 homes on the market and only 185 selling, roughly 4 in 5 listings did not sell. The homes that moved were priced correctly, presented well, and easy to show. If your listing isn't getting traction, the market isn't broken — the strategy needs adjusting.
  • The $400K–$600K corridor is the epicentre of buyer activity. Nearly half of all showings in January occurred in this price range. If your home sits in or near this band, you're competing in the highest-traffic segment of the market — which means pricing to attract showings is critical, not optional.
  • Mid-month and late-month are your peak showing windows. Data shows that January 17, 18, and 24 produced the highest daily showing volumes. For sellers listing in February, timing your launch to align with a mid-month market entry gives you the best opportunity to capture the most active buyer wave.
  • The 21 conditional carry-overs from December signal early momentum. Buyers who went conditional before the new year weren't waiting — they were acting. Listing in late January or early February positions you ahead of the March inventory surge that typically follows spring market announcements.
  • Inventory is building — February will be more competitive. With 793 unsold homes rolling into February and another 310 new listings entering the market (per NSAR data), the total February pool reached 1,074 homes. Every week you delay, the field of competing listings grows. Early-to-market sellers in 2026 have a structural advantage.
  • Showings per listing averaged approximately 5.4 in January. If your listing is receiving significantly fewer showings than this benchmark, it's a signal to evaluate your price point, photography, or listing positioning — not to wait it out.

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